The Number Of Black Folks Dying From Alcohol, Drugs And Suicide May SHOCK You

We must pay attention to this crisis.

Black Americans have felt the brute force of discrimination in many areas, including and especially public health. Startling statistics on drug-related death rates among people of color have jolted us into a national panic in the past, and a new analysis by the Trust for America’s Health (TFAH) and Well Being Trust (WBT) may likely do the same thing in the present.

African-Americans have seen disproportionally large increases in drug deaths, with a rise of 12.6 to 17.6 deaths per 100,000, or 39 percent, between 2015 and 2016. Black folks have the biggest rise in deaths, topping Whites with a 19 percent increase and other racial and ethnic minority groups, including Latinos with a 24 percent increase in that time period. The record-high elevation in rates is also rather drastic considering Blacks had “relatively low” drug overdose rates —averaging 35 percent lower than Whites between 2006 and 2015.

Deaths from synthetic opioids–including fentanyl & carfentanil–doubled from 2015 to 2016 from 9,600 to 19,400 = the driving force for the increase in drug deaths (alcohol, other types of drug and suicide deaths also increased but by a much lower amount). https://t.co/qYCg82a8Ywpic.twitter.com/b45mZ1I5DB

Suicide rates among Blacks and Latinos in 2016 also dramatically climbed more than other demographic groups with 10 and 9 percent increases, respectively.

The dramatically sharp rises in death rates bring more attention to proposed solutions to address racial disparities when it comes to health, especially concerning discrimination’s harmful effects on people of color.

Discrimination affects the lives & health of people across America. And its people who have the power to change that. Find inspiration and write a new story full of hope and healing. #PromoteHealthEquityhttps://t.co/rut6jUpBqg

TFAH and WBT suggested a “National Resilience Strategy” that takes a “comprehensive approach by focusing on prevention, early identification of issues and effective treatment.” Both organizations have ideas to lower excessive alcohol consumption, improve pain management and treatment for various diseases as well as target the Opioid crisis.

These organizations need legislative and public support to accomplish their goals to end drug-related deaths and racial health disparities. Folks can get involved with the organizations’ ramping up their fight on their website: Healthy Americans.